We carried a 155gr load from Black Hills well into the 2000's. It was a Gold Dot bullet on Black Hills Brass. It really walloped in our Gen 2 Glock 23s!
"Perfect Practice Makes Perfect"
"There are 550 million firearms on this planet. That's one firearm for every 12 people. The question is... How do we arm the other 11?" Lord of War.
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We carried the 155gr Hydra-Shok followed by the 155gr HST (not sure it's even available anymore). Both worked well, but tended to beat up guns and shooters quite a bit.
I prefer the 180gr HST.
Never liked .40 recoil. It wears you down quickly and follow-ups are slowed. (More so than .45, common .357 auto, and 9mm IMO)
Unless you're talking about a G22 with a light or heavier pistol. (Like a G20 or G40) Those soak up the recoil.
It does seem like the 165 and 180 gr loads are the police standards these days. The 180's are definitely lower-recoil. 165's seem to vary more.
That's also good for point of impact because most of the practice ammo is 180 gr.
Last edited by Ron3; 01-29-21 at 13:57.
The good 180's in .40 all worked very well. The lightweight bullet .40's only came about to placate those who still bought into the higher velocity better crowd. The 96.328761% "One Shot Stop" guys..... Every one I ever saw shot under penetrated and didn't do as well on barriers.
Last edited by Jake'sDad; 03-01-21 at 17:09.
If I recall correctly, DocGKR stated that of he were working around vehicles often (such as LE work) he'd prefer the 180 gr. .50 for better performance through auto glass.
Idaho State Police recently transitioned to the Gen 5 Glock 19 from the Glock 21.20201106_172626.jpg
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